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Ribes americanum

Kingdom
3Plants
Phylum
6Angiospermae
Class
5Malvanae
Subclass
2Saxifragidae
Phase
1Saxifragales
Subphase
6Grossulariaceae
Stage
0
Name

Ribes americanum

Author

Qjure

Type

Info

Chapter

3-652.16.__

Book
Family
English: Wild black currant; American black currant; Eastern black currant.
Region: North America; Canada, northern United States, New England to Washington, Coloradom, New Mexico; introduced to northern China.
Habitat: many types of forests, conifer bogs; in marshes, sedge meadows; on plains, in mountains, sometimes in disturbed areas, roadsides; shade-tolerant, growing in the understory of closed-canopy woodlands and forests.
BotanyShrub; growing; 50 to 150 cm tall; may form thickets.
Stem: branches erect.
Leaves: deciduous; glandular; up to 8 cm long; with 3 or 5 lobes; red and gold in the fall; no spines.
Inflorescence: spreading or drooping raceme; 15 flowers.
Flower: sepals reflexed white or greenish, few millimeters long; petals smaller, whitish.
Fruit: smooth,rounded, black berry; 1 cm wide.
Use: fruit edible when cooked.
Reproduction: mostly by seed.
  • 0 Kingdoms
  • ›3 Plants
  • ›6 Angiospermae
  • ›5 Malvanae
  • ›2 Saxifragidae
  • ›1 Saxifragales
  • ›6 Grossulariaceae